Album review: The Beach Boysâ âThe Smile Sessionsâ
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
Artists rarely are the best judges of their own work, and Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys is no exception. âProbably nothing Iâve ever done has topped the music I made with Van Dyke [Parks],â Wilson writes in the handsome coffee-table book that accompanies this elaborate new box set.
Related: Official version of Beach Boysâ âSmileâ is released
Heâs referring to âSmile,â the ambitious pop album intended to follow up the Beach Boysâ 1966 landmark âPet Soundsâ; Parks was Wilsonâs principal songwriting partner on the project that fell apart (for a variety of creative and health-related reasons) before it could be completed. In 2004 Wilson released a fresh rendering of âSmileâ under his own name, and now âThe Smile Sessionsâ collects the original recordings â fragments, outtakes and all. Track titles such as âHeroes and Villains: Children Were Raised (Master Take Overdubs Mix 1)â provide an indication of the record-nerd detail on offer here.
Parts of âSmileâ â presented on Disc 1 as it mightâve been had the Beach Boys finished it â do rank among Wilsonâs finest work. âHeroes and Villainsâ is a thrilling mini-symphony whose elegance belies its structural complexity while âCabin Essenceâ luxuriates in the purest strain of his melodic genius. (âGood Vibrationsâ speaks for itself.)
But Wilsonâs suggestion that the sprawling, willfully mosaic whole of âSmileâ is the equal of âPet Soundsâ discounts the flair for pop economy that helped turn the Beach Boys into icons. He more skillfully balanced inspiration and aspiration elsewhere.
The Beach Boys
âThe Smile Sessionsâ (Capitol)
Two and a half stars (out of four)
ALSO:
Van Dyke Parks discusses âArrangements,â Skrillex collaboration
Beach Boysâ 50th anniversary reunion? Donât bet on it
âMikael Wood